samedi 22 février 2014

Hellébore - Anouof Thwo

 
 
HELLÉBORE - Anouof Thwo
2013
Indie
 
Dark, yet bright as a cloudless sky in the middle of the night, Hellébore is a one man atmospheric black metal band from Québec City. Given the plethora of "metal noir" bands in the Belle Province capital, this one comes nonetheless as a refreshing comet in the genre's horizon.
 
Anouof Thwo was made available online, and then released on cassette in 2013. Despite the forty minutes length, this album is (mostly) articulated around two long songs, "Aootw" and "Les Martiens étaient là...", the former being without a doubt the best moment of the album. We also find two short intro / interludes, "Étoiles d'eau" and "Udrea", and one 6-minutes progressive song, "... réfléchis dans l'eau".
 
Lo-fi and visibly homemade, it has the primitive raw emotional charge of a constellation of other black metal bands. Nonetheless, one particular quality caught my attention and showed that Hellébore has something distinct from the mass. As expressed by the cover artwork, Anouof Thwo has a certain "naivety" of ideas, one that is natural for a newcomer, but harder to retrieve for a seasoned musician. It takes the shape of weird electro sounds and questionable programming; a very slippery slope that could normally require a project to stay anonymous, but in some cases, like this one, it just happen to become the magic ingredient that sets the band apart. Hellébore integrates loop reverberation over the guitars as well as 80's space-like synth effects to create a captivating soundscape. Sprinkled over the music, it adds a lot to the atmospheric quality of the whole. Also, positioned in the middle of the five songs, we find an interlude called "Udrea" whose electro/trip hop rhythmic, keyboards and off voice (samples?) bring a short and uncanny momentum between the long black metal songs.
 
Visibly a one-man thing, it is not a surprise to find programmed drums on Anouof Thwo. Along with the repetitive and hypnotic guitar riffing, the oversaturated vocals, and the rich layers of synth in the distance, it brings Hellébore closer to the universes of Neige et Noirceur and Poète Maudit.
 
It should be obvious at this point: Anouof Thwo includes incomprehensible names and meanings--or maybe it's just me who couldn't find the meanings--making the project obscure and mysterious... Other titles such as "Les Martiens étaient là" (Martians were there) give another reading however, one that is not as serious and that makes me think the Maker of Hellébore is having fun with us.
 
Overall, this black star is a good discovery. With its odd alien flavour, Anouof Thwo is a very interesting addition to the Québec atmospheric black metal landscape. Let's hope Hellébore picks up on these strengths and releases a follow up to this odyssey sometimes in the near future.
 
 

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire